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Retreat Dharma Talks
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Step-by-Step: the Upwards Flow
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| Ajahn Sucitto Morning Reflections from March 25 - 30, 2024 |
2024-03-25 (6 days)
Cittaviveka
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2024-03-26
Ethical Responsibility Leads to Concentration and Release
44:17
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Ajahn Sucitto
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Liberation is always a step-by-step process. Each stage flows into the next. It’s a natural process, according to Dhamma. Start on the right track, with virtue – relational sensitivity. Acting in this way gives rise to gladness, then concentration, leading to liberation. (Sutta reference AN 10:2)
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2024-03-27
The flow to liberation: Feeding the Citta
44:01
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Ajahn Sucitto
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The flow to liberation isn’t a flash in the pan miracle, but a gradual, step-by-step process. Begin with the 4 establishments of mindfulness. When held carefully, steadily, with patience, the enlightenment factors develop. It can’t be done out of will power. Rather, nourishment for the process are restraint, mindfulness and careful attention. (Sutta reference AN 10:61)
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2024-03-28
Development without Becoming
49:57
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Ajahn Sucitto
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Our general mode follows a track called becoming. It’s a track that keeps moving, flavoured with craving that never arrives at satisfaction. The Buddha presented a more natural way – step-by-step, chart the course, with friendliness and purity of intention. Mindfulness of body and contemplative thought (vitaka-vicara) support a wider, wholistic mode. Use the process to adjust your world, so you’re not driven and pushed by it.
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2024-03-29
Dhamma practice shapes the Citta into a more fulfilling state
47:35
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Ajahn Sucitto
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The emphasis on virtue, beyond keeping rules, customs and procedures, is to bring about harmony. It enables us to establish a fluent relationship that isn’t domineering nor indifferent, clearing of heart from destructive tendencies. It’s the tonality of careful attention in what we do. Not seeking results, but just bringing forth harmony, beauty, purity in our daily lives. (Sutta reference SN 46:1)
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2024-03-30
The ongoing focus for cultivation is ‘me’
52:02
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Ajahn Sucitto
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The compulsive shaping and drives of the citta are held by grasping – an involuntary reflex that can be mastered through careful cultivation. As the end of this grasping and shaping is the sense of self, that sense of ‘me’ ‘I am this’ is the ongoing focus of our Dhamma practice.
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